Most of you reading this know that I spent a good portion of my career working in, and around, politics. I've written the lines, directed the political actors, analyzed the performances, and taught others how to do the same.
But the script has changed.
So here's a question that should terrify every political consultant in Washington: What if the largest voting bloc in America isn't Democrats or Republicans—but people who are exhausted by politics entirely?
Because that's exactly what the data shows.
The Numbers Don't Lie—And They're Brutal
While insiders obsess over "base mobilization" and fight over thin slices of "swing voters," they're completely missing the scale of democratic breakdown:
Only 22% of Americans trust the federal government to do what's right—among the lowest levels in nearly seven decades of polling (Pew Research, 2024)
Among 18–34 year-olds, trust drops to just 15%.
Only 34% of Americans say they're satisfied with how democracy is working (Gallup, Dec 2024).
And 73% believe there is a serious threat to the future of democracy itself (Marist Poll, Dec 2024).
But here's where it gets truly alarming: Nearly one in three election officials has been harassed, abused, or threatened for doing their jobs (Brennan Center, 2024). One in five worries about being physically assaulted at work. More than one-third know someone who resigned due to safety concerns.
This isn't just abstract institutional decline. It's personal. It's measurable. And it's accelerating.
The Exhausted Majority Is Real—and Growing
These aren't apathetic non-voters.
They are Democratic voters frustrated by party gatekeepers.
Trump supporters disillusioned with GOP establishment theater.
Business leaders sick of regulatory whiplash that serves political performance over economic stability.
Suburban parents watching school boards manufacture cultural crises while infrastructure crumbles.
They're not defined by party. They're defined by a growing disgust with performance politics—and a longing for basic governance that actually works.
Just this week, New York City voters elected a 34-year-old Democratic socialist mayor, rejecting every establishment candidate. This isn't ideological purity—it's exhausted voters choosing authenticity over consultant-approved "electability."
The Political Consultant Blind Spot
Here's what should worry the consultant class:
The exhausted majority is not only real—it's willing to cross party lines for authenticity. But most leaders are still optimizing tactics for a system whose basic assumptions no longer hold.
They're A/B testing fundraising emails while election offices install bulletproof glass.
They're focus-grouping climate messaging while voters watch their communities heat up, and massive storms wash away entire rural towns.
They're polling "economic anxiety" while people choose between rent and groceries.
The exhausted majority wants:
Competence over ideology — Fix the infrastructure, secure the supply chains, make the systems work
Acknowledgment of trade-offs, not easy slogans — Tell us what climate action actually costs and why it's worth it
Evidence of delivery, not performance messaging — Show us the housing getting built, the emissions dropping, the wages rising
Truth over tribal comfort — Admit when Democratic strategies aren't working instead of blaming messaging
Transparency over discipline — Stop pretending complex problems have simple solutions that just need better communication
Reality over narrative — Acknowledge what voters can see with their own eyes about institutional failure
They want someone—anyone—to stop gaslighting them about what they experience daily.
This isn't about moving "left" or "right"—it's about moving toward functional governance in a post-legitimacy, post-truth environment.
Why This Moment Is Different
This isn't just polarization. It's a legitimacy crisis.
When only 22% of Americans trust their government, when election officials need armed security, when voters across the spectrum reject establishment candidates—this isn't normal democratic turbulence. It's systematic breakdown.
And everyone who's paying attention can feel it.
The exhausted majority doesn't expect perfection. But they are demanding honesty about the scope of institutional failure. And they're waiting—watching—for someone to act like they understand the stakes.
What's Next
This isn't a coalition you have to build.
It's already there—spanning the spectrum, tuned in, and losing patience with political theater while real problems go unaddressed.
The question is whether anyone in politics will recognize the size and urgency of this opportunity, or keep performing while the system frays around them.
In my next post, I'll break down exactly what authentic political engagement looks like when traditional institutions have lost legitimacy—not in theory, but in practice.
Because the exhausted majority has waited long enough.
This is Part 1 of my new series on strategic political leadership in a post-legitimacy era.
Have you seen signs of this exhaustion where you live, work, or campaign? Jump into the comments and share your perspective—this conversation matters more than any focus group, or yet another gabfest on partisan cable news shows.
Exhausted and worried about the future of democracy and a president who says "fuck" on live TV, and what standards politicians will follow and be held to in the future. Whew. Thx for letting me get that off my chest.
well stated.
nearly 50% of Mamdanis' NYC primary voter was under 44 yrs old - most of which coming from the 22-34 group